Taking Care: Winter Ritual + Workshop

sold out

Taking Care: Winter Ritual + Workshop

from 80.00

In this daylong workshop, we will explore how to engage in meaningful, mutual relationship with land and plants during the season of turning in. We'll offer some foundational practices of ritual, consent, and communication while learning about nourishing ourselves with plants and looking to the land for lessons on death and renewal.

If the cost is a barrier, please contact us at kamayanfarm@gmail.com. We have several low-cost spots available and we want to see you there! No proof of need required - we know money is funny so please take advantage of this option if you need it.

Cancellation and Refunds: If you cannot make a workshop that you've registered for, you must notify us within 2 weeks of the workshop date to receive a refund.

Phelicia Magnusson is a sensitive creature who works in fierce love. She is an herbalist and flower essence practitioner whose formal training took place at Arbor Vitae School of Traditional Western Herbalism in New York City and with Delta Gardens in Hampton Falls, New Hampshire. Phelicia is particularly interested in the intersection of ritual and healing; she has spent a good deal of time learning in ceremony with plants and elders in the Peruvian Amazon and the Caribbean coast of Costa Rica. As a healer, Phelicia has a great deal of gratitude and awe for the plants themselves, the infinite wisdom they hold, and the elders and traditions that hold plant wisdom sacred. In her work, Phelicia’s mission is to be a medium between plants and people and to support individuals in reconnecting with the wisdom of their bodies and the missions of their hearts.

Ari de Leña is the owner/operator of Kamayan Farm. As a queer, mixed filipinx land worker, she is inspired by the ways that growing food can be an act of resistance. Ari's work with Kamayan Farm is deeply informed by the injustices and resilience that she witnessed during a decade of environmental justice work alongside low-income communities and communities of color. Kamayan Farm is an experiment driven by a vision to (re)connect communities with land and to collaboratively share cultural stories through food and medicine. Ari is a firm believer that our relationship with land is a sacred dialogue; one that allows us to channel the wisdom of plants, our bodies, our ancestors, and makes us more effective agents of change.